
During the 58th annual Grammy Awards, as the nominees were announced for the Best Country Album category, songwriter Jamie Floyd gathered with friends around a television, watching in anticipation. Ashley Monroe’s album, The Blade, was among the nominated albums. Floyd co-wrote the stunning title track with writers Allen Shamblin and Marc Beeson.
Though Grammy honor didn’t go to The Blade that evening, a lifelong dream of Floyd’s was realized. But while being part of a Grammy-nominated project lends prestige and credibility to songwriter, it is no guarantee of a hefty monetary payout.
In Floyd’s case, like numerous other up-and-coming songwriters, industry success doesn’t even guarantee the ability to make a full-time living through making music. Soon after the Grammy celebration, Floyd had to return to her other job, as a waitress.
“In that moment, I was so grateful and it was an ultimate dream come true, and at the same time, to know that that dream come true was not enough to change my life in the way that maybe anyone would think that it could, was very hard to process,” Floyd tells MusicRow.
“When I was coming up in the business, you think that if you are part of something that has a Grammy nomination, you are considered a professional. To me, a professional is someone who does that as their full-time job. To feel like I had reached that professional level in a way with a song that I had written, but that the rest of my life didn’t reflect that, it was encouraging and heartbreaking at the same time. It’s hard to celebrate when you know that you have a job, that isn’t your job as a professional songwriter, waiting for you when you’re done.”

Bill Cody (L) Jamie Floyd (R) in 2016
Floyd’s story is among those told in the new documentary The Last Songwriter, which will hold its world premiere during the Nashville Film Festival on April 27. The Last Songwriter, directed by award-winning filmmaker Mark Barger Elliott and featuring a score by “Bless The Broken Road” songwriter Marcus Hummon, centers on the creative and financial battles being waged by today’s publishers and songwriters, against what they feel are outdated consent decrees and diminishing returns from music streaming services such as Spotify and Pandora.
Luminary songwriters including Hummon, Tony Arata, Matraca Berg, Tom Douglas, Lee Thomas Miller, and Allen Shamblin discuss the effect outdated consent decrees and streaming music have had on their careers. Garth Brooks champions songwriters during his interview for the project at Nashville’s Bluebird Café. Jason Isbell was interviewed at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles, while Jim Lauderdale spoke for the documentary from SESAC’s Nashville headquarters and Emmylou Harris opened her home for an interview.
“I noticed there wasn’t a way for songwriters to make a living. I realized it was a story that needed to be told in a film,” said Elliott, who previously worked in Nashville as a songwriter for several years.
According to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), streaming revenue now makes up 52 percent of industry revenue. Meanwhile, digital downloads revenues dropped 22 percent in the last year, while shipments of music CDs dropped 21 percent.
“It depends on how you look at it, if you are in the industry you could say it’s solidifying, that our business model is starting to work,” Elliott told MusicRow. “But if you are the songwriter, you’re getting 12-14 times less than the artist makes. That means your ability to make a living is decreasing at a pretty big rate. What is difficult for the songwriter is that streaming will soon become the only way people will listen to music.”
It was Floyd’s “The Blade” co-writer Beeson who brought Floyd to Elliott’s attention. Floyd’s story is one of highs and lows, of struggle and hustle. By age 11, she had negotiated her first publishing and record deals. But by age 18, those deals had dissolved, and Floyd enrolled in Nashville’s Belmont University. Throughout her career, Floyd has been supplementing her income from music with work in the restaurant business, a necessity she discusses in the documentary.
“On the initial phone call [for The Last Songwriter], Mark asked me if I was ok with being honest about this,” Floyd said. “A lot of artists and people in the entertainment business, we are expected to make everything look like it is successful and happy and exciting all of the time. You’re kind of trained to not let anybody see you sweat. I had to be okay with owning the fact that so much of my life has been waiting tables and not being 100 percent a songwriter.
“It was an interesting perspective to think that the fact that people knowing the truth might make them think lesser of me, like, ‘If she hasn’t made it there is probably a reason.’ It was very liberating to say, ‘This is who I am, this is what I’ve done, this is what I haven’t done and this is where I am trying to go.’”

Mark Barger Elliott
Newcomer songwriters are not the only ones who have had their incomes deflated by the new streaming economy. In The Last Songwriter, Tom Douglas said though he and Allen Shamblin’s 2010 hit for Miranda Lambert, “The House That Built Me,” had been streamed approximately 20 million times, Shamblin and Douglas brought in approximately $1,000 each from that.
Singer-songwriter Isbell is in a unique position to see discrepancy between the income an artist receives and the income a songwriter receives from streaming services.
“As a label, a recording artist and a songwriter, I get different checks from these services from Spotify, from Pandora, from Apple Music and because I own my label and I’m my own publisher, and I write all the songs myself, I get each individual check and I see the difference between the three. If you see just the one you are getting as a songwriter, it’s pretty heartbreaking.”
During his interview for The Last Songwriter, Brooks stated that Nashville has lost 80 percent of its songwriters.
“If we can’t change the consent decrees, we could potentially lose the next generation of songwriters,” Elliott says. “The next ‘Tony Arata’ could give up before he writes ‘The Dance.’ The next ‘Matraca Berg’ [may be] too tired from working three jobs, she doesn’t spend that week co-writing and doesn’t create ‘You and Tequila’ or ‘Strawberry Wine.’”
For the documentary, NSAI’s Bart Herbison stated that NSAI advises aspiring songwriters to take an honest look at their chances of making a living through crafting songs.
“We tell them statistically that’s never going to happen,” Says Herbison. “We tell them about the decrease in the volume of opportunities for American songwriters, then we start working with songwriters on what is your backup plan, and not just Plan A, Plan B. You better have five or six letters down the alphabet.”
While balancing restaurant work and filming The Last Songwriter, Floyd pursued writing music for another movie, Dog Years, starring Burt Reynolds and Ariel Winter. Writing one song turned into penning 18 songs for the movie, with the majority of the songs making the final cut.
Floyd’s story of hard work and struggle is one of the few with a happy ending. Her work on Dog Years led to her recent signing of a record and publishing deal. With the signings, Floyd is free to leave the restaurant world behind to pursue her craft full-time.
When the Nashville Film Festival begins in April, The Last Songwriter and Dog Years will both have showings. Floyd’s parents will be among those in attendance, to watch their daughter’s story and work come to life on the screen.
“My parents haven’t been here since they dropped me off at Belmont [University] 14 years ago,” Floyd says. “They haven’t seen the restaurants I’ve worked in, they haven’t seen any show I’ve done here. When they had dropped me off as a college freshman, I had just lost a record deal. Now they are coming back to see what is happening now.
“A year ago we were in the thick of filming the restaurant scenes. If you had told the girl mopping at the restaurant a year ago, that exactly a year later that would be completely taken out of the picture, I don’t know if I would have believed you. I am one of many songwriters that have this exact storyline. It’s meant to encourage my generation to not give up, if they know that this is what they are supposed to do.”
The Last Songwriter will premiere at the Nashville Film Festival on Thursday, April 27 at 6 p.m., with a second show on Friday, April 28 at 3 p.m. The Nashville Film Festival will run from April 20-29 at its new location at Regal Hollywood Stadium 27, located at 719 Thompson Lane in Nashville.
Steve Turner, Kitty Moon Emery To Be Honored During Nashville’s National Tourism Week Luncheon
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured (L-R): Steve Turner, Kitty Moon Emery
Nashville businessman Steve Turner and the late Kitty Moon Emery will receive the hospitality industry’s top honors for contributions made to the success of the city’s tourism and convention business, the Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp announced today.
Turner, a longtime advocate for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum and the cultural arts in Nashville, will be presented the E.W. “Bud” Wendell Award, joining past recipients Vince Gill, former Gov. Phil Bredesen and former Mayor Karl Dean. The award recognizes contributions to the success of the tourism and convention business in Nashville by someone outside the industry.
Moon, who was active on the CMA board for two decades and helped bring professional sports to Music City, will posthumously receive the inaugural Francis S. Guess Connector Award, which recognizes an individual who has worked to connect the hospitality industry to the community at large to make Nashville a more appealing, open and successful destination. Nashville developer Pat Emery will accept the award on behalf of his late wife.
“It is impossible to capture all that Steve has contributed to Nashville – through his energetic support of our music industry, our downtown and our quality of life,” said Beth Seigenthaler Courtney, board chair of the Nashville Convention & Visitors Corp and president at DVL Seigenthaler. “Steve is a visionary who recognized early the full potential of downtown as the place to live, work and play by living downtown himself and by leading the revitalization of the Gulch. Also, through his deep involvement with our arts community, including the Nashville Symphony and the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Steve has strengthened the organizations that uphold music in Music City.”
Courtney added, “Kitty was a trailblazer — one of the first corporate leaders to connect the hospitality industry to Music Row and to the broader business community. She was ahead of her time in seeing the impact the music brand could have on our tourism and convention business and on making Nashville a global destination. Kitty was a sharp businesswoman who understood the importance of the hospitality industry as an economic engine and her legacy will always be part of our city’s success.”
Both award winners will be recognized at Nashville’s National Tourism Week Hospitality Industry Celebration, which will take place on May 9 at 11:30 a.m. at the Omni Nashville Hotel.
Industry Ink: The Media Collective, Buffkin/Baker, Ernest Tubb Midnite Jamboree
/by Jessica NicholsonEmily Kozacek Returns To The Media Collective
Emily Kozacek
The Media Collective has hired Emily Kozacek in the role of publicist. Kozacek served on The Media Collective team in 2015, assisting on projects such as The K-LOVE Fan Awards, Rend Collective and Full Circle Music.
With experience in the industry ranging from music publishing to artist management, Kozacek has been a part of assisting the careers of artists and writers Trent Dabbs and Sugar & The Hi-Lows, alongside her work with the artist collective Ten Out Of Tenn, consisting of 27 artists including Paper Route, Joy Williams, Matthew Perryman Jones and more.
“We loved having Emily here a couple of years ago, and are happy to welcome her back,” shares Velvet Kelm, President and Founder of The Media Collective. “She has an infectious personality and work ethic that is inspiring and strengthens our team.”
Kozacek began her new role at The Media Collective at the beginning of April, and can be reached at emily@themcollective.com.
Buffkin/Baker Acquires MusicRowSearch
MusicRowSearch will maintain its office in Nashville, adding an office to Buffkin / Baker’s Nashville operations.
“We have been in growth mode this year, and I am thrilled to have my longtime colleague, Tom Truitt and MusicRowSearch join our firm,” said Craig Buffkin, managing partner of Buffkin/Baker. “This partnership allows us to leverage two of the top industries in the Nashville landscape — health care and the entertainment business. This will open the door to exciting new horizons for our companies.”
The next Who Knew segment will present author Jonathan Taplin as they celebrate the 40th anniversary of The Last Waltz. The event will be held Wednesday, April 18 at City Winery, beginning at 7 p.m.
Ernest Tubb Records Shop To Celebrate 70th Anniversary Of Ernest Tubb Midnite Jamboree
The Ernest Tubb Midnite Jamboree 70th Anniversary Celebration will be held in the same original format as the very first show. Host Glenn Douglas Tubb will kick-off the festivities, a Jimmie Rodgers’ track (Ernest Tubb’s idol) will be highlighted followed by live performances from Melanie Walker and Robin Right, with a guest appearance by Dottie Swan Tubb. In keeping with the show’s tradition, and Tubb’s passion to support new talent, attendees will also enjoy a performance from country duo Presley & Taylor.
MusicRowPics: Dylan Scott’s Long Road To Radio
/by Jessica NicholsonDylan Scott
Don’t be surprised if you hear an abundance of love songs on Dylan Scott’s self-titled album from Curb Records. Scott, who in May will celebrate his first wedding anniversary to his high school sweetheart Blair, says his wife has been the inspiration for most of the tracks from his upcoming project.
“We’ve been together since I was 15 and she was 16. I’ve been with her longer than I’ve been writing songs, so a lot of my songs are love songs.”
His current chart-climbing single, “My Girl,” is one of those inspired tracks.
“She’s really shy, but we were driving around and she started rapping an Eminem song word for word. Later I was writing, inspired by that moment, and I made the song about all the things that I see in my girl that nobody gets to see but me.”
The song’s imagery creates a picture of a ballcap wearing, music-loving southern girl who holds strongly to her family and her faith. He says he did take one creative liberty with the song.
“The only line that is not true about her is a line about drinking Crown and Sprite. She doesn’t drink Crown and Sprite, but it rhymed really well.”
Dylan Scott with MusicRow staffers.
Musical talent runs in the family for this Louisiana native. His father played guitar with Freddy Fender and Freddy Hart back in the late ‘70s and ‘80s. Following in his father’s musical footsteps, Scott first began making trips to Nashville as a teenager, when he met Nashville executive Howard Fields.
“He told me, ‘I’m going to try to get you a record deal in six months. If I don’t, you don’t have to sign anything with me, go do what you want to do. I remember driving around in my truck In Louisiana and he called and told me I had two label offers, one from Warner Music and one from Curb Records. I’m a huge Tim McGraw fan, and I grew up about 30 minutes from where he’s from. I’d look at the back of a Tim album and would always see Curb Records. So it was like, ‘Is this really happening?’ when I signed with Curb. So when I met with them it just felt right so I signed with them.”
At age 19, Scott signed a recording deal with Curb Records’ now defunct subsidiary Sidewalk Records. When Sidewalk shuttered, Scott was transferred to Curb Records. Last year, Scott first hit the Top 40 with the single “Crazy Over Me.” He says the long road to radio success has been a blessing in disguise.
“It’s been a huge blessing though that it’s taken six or seven years to get music out, because who I was then is not who I am now. The music I recorded then, was me trying to figure out who I was. I’m a huge Keith Whitley fan so when I moved to town, I was like, ‘I’ll be the next Keith Whitley.’ But you get to town and you are intimidated because there are so many great artists in this town. So I didn’t know who I was at the time. You get in there and start writing and you get on the road and start playing music and you find out who you are.”
Last year, Scott performed more than 130 shows, after wrapping an opening slot for Lee Brice’s Life Off My Years tour. In between gigs, he’s been crafting his 13-track, self-titled album for Curb Records. The album was produced by his longtime songwriting and producing friend Matt Alderman, alongside Curb Records’ Chief Creative Advisor Jim Ed Norman.
Little Big Town To Perform At Music Biz Awards Breakfast In Nashville
/by Lorie HollabaughSponsored by the CMA, the breakfast will also feature awards presentations to Universal Music Group Nashville Chairman and CEO Mike Dungan, who will receive the Presidential Award for Outstanding Executive Achievement, and Music Millennium Founder Terry Currier, who will receive the Independent Spirit Award.
“We are thrilled to have Little Big Town — our Music Biz 2016 Artist of the Year — back for our 2017 convention,” said Music Biz President James Donio. “Since we last saw them, the group has released a brand new album, The Breaker; has had a multi-week No. 1 with ‘Better Man’ and recently released the critically-acclaimed single ‘Happy People’ to country radio; and has become the first act ever to lock down a residency at the historic Ryman Auditorium. We are huge fans of their music and cannot wait to share their talent with our Awards Breakfast attendees.”
During the breakfast Music Biz Chairman Fred Beteille of Facebook will also announce the 2017-2018 Music Biz Board of Directors and Music Biz Scholarship Foundation Class of 2017.
Industry Ink: InDo Nashville, WRTB, Freddy Powers
/by Lorie HollabaughGary Burr Master Class Moves To InDo Nashville
Gordon Mays Joins WRTB The Bull
Gordon Mays will join MusicRow panel station WRTB 95.3 The Bull in Rockford, Illinois, for afternoons, beginning in mid-May.
“Gordon is talented, personable and relates well with listeners,” said WRTB PD Steve Summers. “He also brings years of experience in imaging, and as a booking talent for live music venues, various festivals and events. He is the perfect fit for 95.3 The Bull and we look forward to hearing him having fun riding “The Bull” in Rockford!”
Freddy Powers’ ‘Spree of 83’ Coming To The Big Screen
The two penned Haggard’s signature hits like “Natural High,” “I Always Get Lucky With You,” “Let’s Chase Each Other Round the Room Tonight,” and “Looking for a Place to Fall Apart” against the backdrop of Lake Shasta. Freddy’s battle with Parkinson’s Disease will also be chronicled in the story as well. Powers died in June 2016, at age 84.
Pandora Debuts New ‘Sounds Like You’ Campaign
/by Lorie HollabaughIn addition to digital ads and billboards, “Sounds Like You” will appear across multiple channels including artist and influencer programs with Pitchfork and VICE’s music channel Noisey; digital shorts, and social media activations including Snapchat lenses and geofilters, and a custom Pandora emoji on Twitter.
Pandora also announced that their Premium service, previously accessible via invite only, will now be available to all listeners via the App Store and Google Play or at pandora.com/premium.
BMI Honors Loretta Lynn With Million-Air Award
/by Jessica NicholsonPictured: BMI’s Jody Williams awards BMI songwriter Loretta Lynn a Million-Air award with help from BMI’s Mary Loving. Photo: Steve Lowry
BMI’s Jody Williams stopped by BMI songwriter Loretta Lynn’s 85th birthday party at the Ryman Auditorium on April 15, to present the country star with a Million-Air award in recognition of two million radio spins of her song “Coal Miner’s Daughter.”
Lynn’s celebratory show lasted two hours and was filled with tributes from friends and family, as well as a performance from the star.
Weekly Register: Keith Urban, Sam Hunt Top Sales Charts
/by Lorie HollabaughSam Hunt
On the singles side, Sam Hunt has the hottest-selling country track this week with 61K copies sold of his new smash, “Body Like A Back Road,’ which is now at 677K year-to-date. Trailing Hunt in top single sales for the week are Keith Urban and Carrie Underwood‘s “The Fighter” at 29K, Brett Young‘s “In Case You Didn’t Know” at 28K, Thomas Rhett and Maren Morris‘ “Craving You” at 19K, and Miranda Lambert with “Tin Man” at 19K.
Overall digital track sales are down 24.3 percent for the year, while country track sales are down 23.3 percent.Information provided via Nielsen Soundscan.
Exclusive: Nashville Film Festival Feature ‘The Last Songwriter’ Highlights Struggles, Hope For Music Creators
/by Jessica NicholsonDuring the 58th annual Grammy Awards, as the nominees were announced for the Best Country Album category, songwriter Jamie Floyd gathered with friends around a television, watching in anticipation. Ashley Monroe’s album, The Blade, was among the nominated albums. Floyd co-wrote the stunning title track with writers Allen Shamblin and Marc Beeson.
Though Grammy honor didn’t go to The Blade that evening, a lifelong dream of Floyd’s was realized. But while being part of a Grammy-nominated project lends prestige and credibility to songwriter, it is no guarantee of a hefty monetary payout.
In Floyd’s case, like numerous other up-and-coming songwriters, industry success doesn’t even guarantee the ability to make a full-time living through making music. Soon after the Grammy celebration, Floyd had to return to her other job, as a waitress.
“In that moment, I was so grateful and it was an ultimate dream come true, and at the same time, to know that that dream come true was not enough to change my life in the way that maybe anyone would think that it could, was very hard to process,” Floyd tells MusicRow.
“When I was coming up in the business, you think that if you are part of something that has a Grammy nomination, you are considered a professional. To me, a professional is someone who does that as their full-time job. To feel like I had reached that professional level in a way with a song that I had written, but that the rest of my life didn’t reflect that, it was encouraging and heartbreaking at the same time. It’s hard to celebrate when you know that you have a job, that isn’t your job as a professional songwriter, waiting for you when you’re done.”
Bill Cody (L) Jamie Floyd (R) in 2016
Floyd’s story is among those told in the new documentary The Last Songwriter, which will hold its world premiere during the Nashville Film Festival on April 27. The Last Songwriter, directed by award-winning filmmaker Mark Barger Elliott and featuring a score by “Bless The Broken Road” songwriter Marcus Hummon, centers on the creative and financial battles being waged by today’s publishers and songwriters, against what they feel are outdated consent decrees and diminishing returns from music streaming services such as Spotify and Pandora.
Luminary songwriters including Hummon, Tony Arata, Matraca Berg, Tom Douglas, Lee Thomas Miller, and Allen Shamblin discuss the effect outdated consent decrees and streaming music have had on their careers. Garth Brooks champions songwriters during his interview for the project at Nashville’s Bluebird Café. Jason Isbell was interviewed at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles, while Jim Lauderdale spoke for the documentary from SESAC’s Nashville headquarters and Emmylou Harris opened her home for an interview.
“I noticed there wasn’t a way for songwriters to make a living. I realized it was a story that needed to be told in a film,” said Elliott, who previously worked in Nashville as a songwriter for several years.
According to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), streaming revenue now makes up 52 percent of industry revenue. Meanwhile, digital downloads revenues dropped 22 percent in the last year, while shipments of music CDs dropped 21 percent.
“It depends on how you look at it, if you are in the industry you could say it’s solidifying, that our business model is starting to work,” Elliott told MusicRow. “But if you are the songwriter, you’re getting 12-14 times less than the artist makes. That means your ability to make a living is decreasing at a pretty big rate. What is difficult for the songwriter is that streaming will soon become the only way people will listen to music.”
It was Floyd’s “The Blade” co-writer Beeson who brought Floyd to Elliott’s attention. Floyd’s story is one of highs and lows, of struggle and hustle. By age 11, she had negotiated her first publishing and record deals. But by age 18, those deals had dissolved, and Floyd enrolled in Nashville’s Belmont University. Throughout her career, Floyd has been supplementing her income from music with work in the restaurant business, a necessity she discusses in the documentary.
“On the initial phone call [for The Last Songwriter], Mark asked me if I was ok with being honest about this,” Floyd said. “A lot of artists and people in the entertainment business, we are expected to make everything look like it is successful and happy and exciting all of the time. You’re kind of trained to not let anybody see you sweat. I had to be okay with owning the fact that so much of my life has been waiting tables and not being 100 percent a songwriter.
“It was an interesting perspective to think that the fact that people knowing the truth might make them think lesser of me, like, ‘If she hasn’t made it there is probably a reason.’ It was very liberating to say, ‘This is who I am, this is what I’ve done, this is what I haven’t done and this is where I am trying to go.’”
Mark Barger Elliott
Newcomer songwriters are not the only ones who have had their incomes deflated by the new streaming economy. In The Last Songwriter, Tom Douglas said though he and Allen Shamblin’s 2010 hit for Miranda Lambert, “The House That Built Me,” had been streamed approximately 20 million times, Shamblin and Douglas brought in approximately $1,000 each from that.
Singer-songwriter Isbell is in a unique position to see discrepancy between the income an artist receives and the income a songwriter receives from streaming services.
“As a label, a recording artist and a songwriter, I get different checks from these services from Spotify, from Pandora, from Apple Music and because I own my label and I’m my own publisher, and I write all the songs myself, I get each individual check and I see the difference between the three. If you see just the one you are getting as a songwriter, it’s pretty heartbreaking.”
During his interview for The Last Songwriter, Brooks stated that Nashville has lost 80 percent of its songwriters.
“If we can’t change the consent decrees, we could potentially lose the next generation of songwriters,” Elliott says. “The next ‘Tony Arata’ could give up before he writes ‘The Dance.’ The next ‘Matraca Berg’ [may be] too tired from working three jobs, she doesn’t spend that week co-writing and doesn’t create ‘You and Tequila’ or ‘Strawberry Wine.’”
For the documentary, NSAI’s Bart Herbison stated that NSAI advises aspiring songwriters to take an honest look at their chances of making a living through crafting songs.
“We tell them statistically that’s never going to happen,” Says Herbison. “We tell them about the decrease in the volume of opportunities for American songwriters, then we start working with songwriters on what is your backup plan, and not just Plan A, Plan B. You better have five or six letters down the alphabet.”
While balancing restaurant work and filming The Last Songwriter, Floyd pursued writing music for another movie, Dog Years, starring Burt Reynolds and Ariel Winter. Writing one song turned into penning 18 songs for the movie, with the majority of the songs making the final cut.
Floyd’s story of hard work and struggle is one of the few with a happy ending. Her work on Dog Years led to her recent signing of a record and publishing deal. With the signings, Floyd is free to leave the restaurant world behind to pursue her craft full-time.
When the Nashville Film Festival begins in April, The Last Songwriter and Dog Years will both have showings. Floyd’s parents will be among those in attendance, to watch their daughter’s story and work come to life on the screen.
“My parents haven’t been here since they dropped me off at Belmont [University] 14 years ago,” Floyd says. “They haven’t seen the restaurants I’ve worked in, they haven’t seen any show I’ve done here. When they had dropped me off as a college freshman, I had just lost a record deal. Now they are coming back to see what is happening now.
“A year ago we were in the thick of filming the restaurant scenes. If you had told the girl mopping at the restaurant a year ago, that exactly a year later that would be completely taken out of the picture, I don’t know if I would have believed you. I am one of many songwriters that have this exact storyline. It’s meant to encourage my generation to not give up, if they know that this is what they are supposed to do.”
The Last Songwriter will premiere at the Nashville Film Festival on Thursday, April 27 at 6 p.m., with a second show on Friday, April 28 at 3 p.m. The Nashville Film Festival will run from April 20-29 at its new location at Regal Hollywood Stadium 27, located at 719 Thompson Lane in Nashville.
Spirit Music Nashville Acquires Cary Barlowe Catalog
/by Jessica NicholsonCary Barlowe
Spirit Music Nashville has acquired the song catalog of Cary Barlowe, as announced today by David Renzer, Chairman, Spirit Music Group and Daniel Hill, President, Spirit Music Nashville. Barlowe was named SESAC Songwriter of the Year in 2015.
“We are thrilled to welcome the amazing catalogue of Cary Barlowe to our growing Spirit Music Nashville family,” said Renzer.
“Cary is such a talented and versatile writer, and this catalog reflects that fact in every way. We are very pleased that Cary has entrusted Spirit Music Nashville with this great collection of songs,” said Hill.
Over the past few years, Barlowe has written four No. 1 country hits with and for artists including Dustin Lynch (“Where It’s At”), Florida Georgia Line (“Sun Daze”), Lady Antebellum (“American Honey”), and Billy Currington (“It Don’t Hurt Like It Used To”). He’s also had nine No. 1 Christian songs with TobyMac (“Made to Love,” “I’m for You,” “Tonight,” “City On Our Knees,” “Hold On,” “Christmas this Year,” “One World,” “Get Back Up,” and “Feel It”) as well as three Grammy nominations for Contemporary/Gospel Song of the Year with TobyMac.
Other prominent songs written by Barlowe include “Beat Up Bible” by Little Big Town; “Good Good” and “Guys and Girls” by Florida Georgia Line; “Making Me Say” by Brett Young; “Good Morning” by American Idol alum Mandisa; and “Just Around the Corner” by Martina McBride, to name a few. Barlowe also has upcoming cuts slated to be released by leading artists Rascal Flatts and Dan Tyminski, among others.